Wednesday, March 28, 2012

WORKSHOP IN DC!

JERRY: SHAPE AND SIZE

JERRY: VALUE,  LINE & TEXTURE
I am in the Washington, DC area teaching my VARIATIONS workshop for the Potomac Watercolor Society.  This is a great group of talented women in the workshop and we are having a wonderful time.    Each day is devoted to a different element of design.  Here are my demos for the element of SHAPE and VALUE.  By a roll of the dice, each participant selects a color combination to work with and a secondary element of design to pair with the element for the day.   I do the same and it makes for lots of unexpected results, lots of laughs and great creativity.

I didn't get to photograph all of the paintings, yet.  I will make a slide show to showcase all the inventive solutions this group is coming up with.  Can't wait to share it all with you.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

SURPRISE!



I was talking with Jenna from the Madeline Island School of the Arts  on Madeline Island Wisconsin today.  She wanted to post my coffee stirrer drawing video on their website and their Facebook page.  Here are the links below if you want to check it out.  This is going to be an awsome place for me to teach and for the students to have a great art vacation.  While I was looking for the video, I found this little one I had made.  I had totally forgotten about it.  Thought you might like to see it.  Have you made a video of yourself making art?  If not, give it a try.  It is so much fun!
http://www.madelineartschool.com/Classes_detail.cfm?recordno=4&Product_CatalogID=143&ProductNumber=PMW07091312&ProductCode=47&NewPro

http://www.facebook.com/MISAWorkshops

Monday, March 19, 2012

TAMING TAR GEL!

THE CLAN #16 YUPO W/TAR GEL
I have always been frustrated that I couldn't get tar gel acrylic to go exactly where I wanted.  I finally figured out a way to "draw" with it.  Using a rubber funnel I put the tar gel into an empty hair dye bottle that had a small but big enough opening.  It took awhile but I am happy with the results.  YUPO is so smooth the gel flattened out somewhat.  I am going to try it on traditional paper and see if it flattens out as much.  This version of The Clan is very colorful, lots of fun to do.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

SCRATCHING AN ITCH!

THE CLAN #15 on YUPO
This is based on a technique in Mary Todd Beam's book Your Creative Self.  The white part isn't so white but very pastel in the actual painting.  I am getting very frustrated in the poor color reproduction I am getting from my photos.  I can't decide if it is the camera or my lack of skill of the computer program.  So many variables!  Anyway, the basic steps to creating this was using swirling drawing lines, I drew the heads on YUPO using oil pastels in many different colors.  The background is white, not blue! 
THE CLAN #15 STEP ONE

 Then I covered the painting with black gesso and let it dry.  The next part was a bit tricky, trying to find exactly where the images where until I realized that that scraping the gesso was only coming off where the oil pastel was underneath!  I was disappointed that so much of the color came off and only left a tint on the paper.  I then mixed black and white gesso together and added some blue for the background.

So there you have it: TINT/BLACK/TONE

Monday, March 12, 2012

IT'S INTENSE!

THE CLAN #14 ( Hue, Black, Tone)

We have been dealing with one of the most least studied aspect of color: Intensity.  The biggest problem is with the word itself.  I don't know who decided to describe the purity of a color with the word "Intensity" but it's a done deal and we have to live with it.  In English we think of "intensity" as over the top saturation rather than purity, so when you try to explain that a pale tint that is pure in chroma is high intensity, the mind boggles and it feels confusing.  It is important that we are all using the same words to describe things in art, so we are stuck.  And, of course, not all tube colors are pure Hue, mucking up the color waters even more.  It takes awhile to come to grips with the terms and how to integrate the knowledge into successful paintings but that can be part of the fun of this art journey!
Intensity is the biggest element that impacts the mood of your painting, so how can one put that to good use?

There was a world renowned color specialist  in the last century (thought sounds weird!) named Faber-Birren who figured out that any color could be described with one of seven words: 1.HUE (Pure hue - outside edge of the color wheel) 2. WHITE  3. BLACK 4. TINT ( Hue plus White) 5. SHADE (Hue plus Black) 6. GREY (White plus Black) or 7. TONE (Hue plus Black and White or Hue plus Compliment.  All complimentary combinations consist of some part of Red Yellow and Blue.  When all 3 primary colors are present in any ratio, the purity of the color is diminished making it a TONE)

Diagrammed it looks like this:



                                         WHITE


TINT     GREY

                                                     TONE

  HUE BLACK

                                                        SHADE


Draw a large circle around the words HUE     WHITE    BLACK and  a smaller circle around  TINT    TONE   SHADE   GREY.   Now draw a line connecting HUE to TINT,  TINT to WHITE, WHITE to GREY,  etc. and a line from each of the outside words to TONE in the middle.  

If you take THREE of these WORDS that are linked by connecting lines  and create a painting using this Intensity Strategy, you will create a different mood with each different combination.    Here are a few of the possible combinations.    
I figured there were 20 different combinations.  I wrote each one on a separate slip of paper, but them in a sack and drew two out for my paintings this past week.   The above painting is HUE, TONE & BLACK.   This is a very challenging but entertaining exercise.  Give it a try!

1.  White - Grey -  Black
2.  Hue -  Tint  - White
3. Hue - Shade - Black
4. Tint - Tone - Shade
5. Tint - Tone - Black
6. Tint - Tone - Grey
7. Shade - Tone - White
8. Hue - White - Black (use primary and secondary colors)
9. Tint - Tone - Shade - Grey (use intermediate hues i.e. red-orange, blue-green etc.)

Saturday, March 10, 2012

SURPRISE!

MORRIE & ME!

I was at a fabulous Contemporary Craft Fair today and look who I found!!!  This is Morrie.  I took a photo of him (with his knowledge and permission for a change) a number of years ago.  I had lost his business card and struggled with remembering whether his name was Morrie Elmer or Elmer Morris.  Anyway I referred to him as Morrie over the years.  He has played a big part in my workshops as the image I was working from and sometimes he was also the image the students were using.  I had not run into Morrie again until today.  It made my day!  I'm sure he was startled to find someone so excited to see him.  My friend took this photo and I took a few more of just Morrie but they came out about the same pose as before.  His beard and hat haven't changed a bit and with close inspection, this is the same shirt!  I am inspired to use his image again.  Here are some of the images I e-mailed to Morrie.  Thought he might want to see what I have been doing to his face over the years.











Wednesday, March 7, 2012

DEMO RESULTS!

JERRY - DEMO FOR BURLINGAME ART SOCIETY
My demonstration tonight was about adding texture to the surface before painting.  By the time I finished showing examples of materials to use and how those looked in finished paintings, I had only about 1/2 hour to do the painting.  To add to the excitement, they did not have an overhead mirror, so I suggested people could gather around while I painted.  Everyone was talking, touching the different materials and conversing with me.  Strangely enough, this doesn't bother me in the least.  I learned how to filter out what I don't want to focus on years ago when I was very young.  This ability  has served me well over the years.  I think I will add a touch more to the clothing and then call it finished.

There was a woman at the meeting that was telling me all about Madeline Island where I will be giving a workshop in July.  It turns out her family is from there and she was sharing all the fabulous places to visit in the area and all the beauty that is in that part of the country.  My husband was ready to hop a plane tomorrow!  I am getting very excited about going, myself.  Combining art and vacation is just the best!  

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

LOOSING TRACK!

THE CLAN #13

THE CLAN #13 COLLAGED BACKGROUND

I am starting to loose track of my numbering!  This painting I did was on top of an older, unsuccessful painting.  The collaged papers were all hand stamped tissue from my extensive collection.  Tomorrow I will be giving a demonstration for the Burlingame Art Society.  The meeting starts at 7PM.  This is the technique I will be showing.  It includes some of the ideas that I am going to teach at Kanuga this year.  Everything is coming together!

I received an e-mail today letting me know that the Western Federation Exhibition wants to use my painting for their poster and postcard.  This is the first time I have received such an honor.  Wish I could go to the show in Las Vegas this year, but I have a scheduling conflict.  When are they going to perfect the "Beam me up, Scotty" technology.  Then we could be two places at once!

Monday, March 5, 2012

THE CLAN #12

Beginning stage, colored tissue over failed painting.  Some Gold acrylic on white tissue in upper right and middle left

THE CLAN #12 

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